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2007–08 San Jose Sharks season

National Hockey League team season From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 2007–08 San Jose Sharks season began on October 4, 2007. It was the San Jose Sharks' 17th season in the National Hockey League. The Sharks finished the season as the Pacific Division champions, and second in the Western Conference and the entire league with a 49–23–10 record for a total of 108 points.

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Offseason

During the pre-season, the 2007 NHL entry draft took place in Columbus, Ohio, on June 22–23.[1] Additionally, the free agency period began on July 1.[2][3]

Regular season

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The Sharks began a win streak of road games on November 14, 2007, when they beat the Dallas Stars with a shootout win.[4] The Sharks went on to win nine more consecutive road games, which gave them 10 straight wins on the road.[5] The streak ended when the Sharks lost to the Anaheim Ducks on January 13, 2008. This was also the game where Head Coach Ron Wilson gave the Sharks' backup goaltender, Thomas Greiss, his first start and rested Evgeni Nabokov, who was the starting goaltender for all the other Sharks games played up until the All-Star break.[6]

The Sharks' streak of ten-straight road wins was second to the 12 road game win streak posted by the Detroit Red Wings in 2006.[7]

Jonathan Cheechoo earned his first hat-trick of the season on February 9, 2008 at the HP Pavilion against the Nashville Predators.[8] This was the ninth time that Cheechoo earned a hat-trick in his career. The Sharks won the game 4–3 and gave Ron Wilson his 500th win as an NHL coach, the 11th coach in League history to reach the milestone.[9]

The Sharks have continued with another win streak of 11 games at home and on the road.[10] Since February 21, when the Sharks played the Philadelphia Flyers away in Philadelphia and won the game 3–1, they started their lengthy winning streak. On February 29, 2008, the Sharks played the Detroit Red Wings in Detroit and came across a 3–2 win on a controversial goal by Devin Setoguchi to push the winning streak to four consecutive games. San Jose played the Montreal Canadiens on March 3 in San Jose and pulled away with a 6–4 win to push their winning streak to six games. On March 5 in San Jose, they played the Ottawa Senators and pulled away with a winner in overtime by Patrick Marleau to push their winning streak to seven games. The Sharks won the Pacific Division and finished second in the Western Conference.

The Sharks finished the regular season having allowed the fewest power-play goals, with 44, and with the best penalty-kill percentage (85.81%).[11]

Divisional standings

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Conference standings

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Rob Davison coming up the left side with the puck.
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Divisions: PA – Pacific, CE – Central, NW – Northwest
bold – qualified for playoffs, y – division winner, pPresidents' Trophy winner

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Playoffs

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On March 28, the Sharks clinched the Pacific Division title with a 3–1 win at Anaheim. The Sharks finished the regular season as the 2nd seed in the Western Conference. The Sharks began their first series, the Western Conference Quarter-finals, against the 7th seed Calgary Flames, losing the first game 3–2 but winning the second 2–0, tying the series at 1 win each. In the third game, the Sharks lost by a score of 4–3, falling back by 2 games to 1 game in the series. Game 4 saw Jonathan Cheechoo score the tying goal with just under five minutes to play in the third, and Joe Thornton scoring the game-winner with 9.4 seconds remaining in regulation to send the series back to San Jose tied at two games apiece. Back in San Jose for Game 5, the Flames' Jerome Iginla scored a 2nd period, 5-on-3 goal to give Calgary the first goal of the game, but the Sharks would score the next 4 goals and hang on for a 4–3 win for a 3–2 series lead. The Sharks showed poorly in Game 6, losing to Calgary in a shut-out, 2 -0, forcing Game 7. The Sharks played with Jeremy Roenick scoring twice and adding two assists to power the Sharks in a decisive 5–3 win over Calgary, clinching the series. The Sharks advanced to meet the Dallas Stars in Round 2 (Western Conference Semifinals) of the playoffs. In Game 1 of the Semifinals, the Sharks had a strong defensive showing at home, but lost in overtime to the Stars, 3–2, on a Brenden Morrow goal. After losing Games 2 & 3 and falling to a 3–0 deficit in the series, the Sharks won Game 4 in Dallas and Game 5 at home to force a Game 6 in Dallas. After playing into a fourth overtime period in the longest game in Sharks history (and 8th longest NHL game of all time), the Sharks season ended on a power play goal by the Stars' Brenden Morrow.

Schedule and results

Preseason

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Regular season

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Playoffs

More information 2008 Stanley Cup playoffs, Game ...
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Player statistics

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Regular season

Skaters

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Joe Thornton facing off in a game versus the Vancouver Canucks.

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes

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Goaltenders

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Evgeni Nabokov is crashed into by Martin Erat during a game versus the Nashville Predators.

Note: GP = Games played; TOI = Time on ice (minutes); W = Wins; L = Losses; OT = Overtime/shootout losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; Sv% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average

PlayerGPTOIWLOTGASOSv%GAA
Evgeni Nabokov7745614621816360.9102.14
Brian Boucher5238311710.9321.76
Thomas Greiss3129011700.8603.26
Dimitri Patzold344000400.8005.45

Playoffs

Skaters

Note: GP = Games played; G = Goals; A = Assists; Pts = Points; +/- = Plus/minus; PIM = Penalty minutes

More information Player, GP ...

Goaltenders

Note: GP = Games played; TOI = Time on ice (minutes); W = Wins; L = Losses; GA = Goals against; SO = Shutouts; Sv% = Save percentage; GAA = Goals against average

PlayerGPTOIWLGASOSv%GAA
Evgeni Nabokov13853673110.9072.18
Brian Boucher1200000.0000.00
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Awards and records

The Sharks did not win any awards during the 2007–2008 NHL season.[13]

Records

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Christian Ehrhoff and Chris Kunitz during a pre-season game.

Milestones

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Transactions

The Sharks were involved in the following transactions during the 2007–08 season.

Trades

June 22, 2007
To Toronto Maple Leafs
Vesa Toskala
Mark Bell
To San Jose Sharks
1st-round pick in 2007Lars Eller
2nd-round pick in 2007Aaron Palushaj
4th-round pick in 2009 – Craig Smith
January 29, 2008
To Columbus Blue Jackets
6th-round pick in 2009 – David Pacan
To San Jose Sharks
Jody Shelley
February 7, 2008
To Carolina Hurricanes
Future considerations
To San Jose Sharks
J. D. Forrest
February 26, 2008
To Buffalo Sabres
Steve Bernier
1st-round pick in 2008 – Tyler Ennis
To San Jose Sharks
Brian Campbell
7th-round pick in 2008 – Drew Daniels
February 26, 2008
To New York Islanders
Rob Davison
To San Jose Sharks
7th-round pick in 2008 – Jason Demers

Free agents signed

PlayerFormer team
Alexei SemenovFlorida Panthers
Jeremy RoenickPhoenix Coyotes
Sandis OzolinshNew York Rangers
Brian BoucherColumbus Blue Jackets

Free agents lost

PlayerNew team
Scott HannanColorado Avalanche
Mathieu DarcheTampa Bay Lightning
Bill GuerinNew York Islanders
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Draft picks

San Jose's picks at the 2007 NHL entry draft in Columbus, Ohio.[3]

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Farm teams

Worcester Sharks

The Worcester Sharks were the San Jose Sharks' American Hockey League affiliate.

Phoenix RoadRunners

The Phoenix RoadRunners were the Sharks affiliate in the ECHL.

See also

References

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